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Rolls-Royce predicts it will create tailor-made cars for the rich and famous

The 103EX provides a glimpse of the direction in which Rolls-Royce’s car-making is heading in the years to come.

Bespoke services are enjoying boom times, and the fantasy of a one-off luxury car designed just for you could soon become a reality. The idea of a completely individualised car has, in a business that requires standardised tooling and economies of scale to work well, remained a dream. Yet, Rolls-Royce now says it could be around the corner – or at least here within the next couple of decades.

That’s the contention of Giles Taylor, Rolls-Royce’s head of design, whose latest project, the Rolls-Royce 103EX, is a vision of where the company’s car making will be in years to come. Most striking of all, among the many ideas it includes, is the notion that a customer will, effectively, be able to not just have the interior and finishing to his personal taste – as services the likes of Bentley’s Mulliner and BMW’s Individual Manufaktur departments already offer – but the actual bodywork too.

“Fundamental to the idea of the 103EX is that it will allow the possibility of a fully personalised car, such that nobody’s Rolls-Royce would look like any other – each would look unique, and not just at the level of, for instance, the colour of the upholstery,” Taylor explains.

The idea of bespoke cars has always posed the ultimate headache for the used car trade. According to one study, by automotive analysts CAP, the car industry is seeing a proliferation of new models as it attempts to fill ever more niche market gaps. But that’s not the real problem. It’s the explosion in options within in each model. Indeed, CAP reports a 187 per cent increase in option “packs” over just a three-year period. That makes comparing cars bewildering. Imagine the confusion on the forecourt.

Legalities will also become more complicated. “The possibility of a fully bespoke car will exist but the legislative changes in the automotive industry will make it tricky,” argues Uday Senapati, the head of technical operations at Bentley’s Mulliner operations, “and regulations are only likely to get more stringent, with the advent of autonomous cars, for example.” But it’s the way we want to shop these days: whether it be demand for distinction amid globalisation’s homogenous products, a means of filtering huge consumer choice or – more psychologically – to expressing our individuality, as shoppers we’re looking for the things we buy to be as unique as possible. What was once only typical of the top of the market, is now a mass-market phenomenon – everything from jeans to sneakers can now be easily customised prepurchase.

Taylor concedes that he’s taking a bet that the technology will be available to allow this to happen – “we can only guess when” – but is extrapolating from tech already here and improving all the time.

3D printing, for instance, is, he notes, already being used to make parts for Formula One racing cars. Red Bull and Lotus are among the teams known to use 3D printing in the manufacture of parts for test cars, with the Caterham team having made up to 900 parts a month and seeing them successfully survive the extreme forces of Formula One.

Rapid prototyping, which decreases development time and allows corrections to be made early (and inexpensively) in the process, will also play a part. Such technologies would, says Taylor, make realistic the kind of car body parts that would be prohibitively expensive if possible to make using conventional methods.

Fundamental to the idea of the 103EX is that it will allow the possibility of a fully personalised car, such that nobody’s Rolls-Royce would look like any other

Giles Taylor, head of design, Rolls-Royce

Certainly tech is playing a part in Rolls-Royce’s planning for its 21st century manufacturing. While other prestige makers use a monocoque approach to car building – by which the body is structurally integral to the chassis – it has decided to work with a space frame: this means that while the fundamental engineering remains consistent underneath, the body parts slotted over it can vary widely. Since not every last aspect of a car need be reconsidered from scratch, this could allow for a new level of consumer choice.

“The space frame approach will allow for much greater flexibility in the outer form of car in the future,” Taylor stresses. “We could in effect fit a bespoke skin over the top of it when the technology catches us up. Although it’s a real look into the future, the 103EX is a confident expression of what will happen. And we can see a time when a client will come to Rolls-Royce, express their vision of what they want and we’ll be able to turn around that individual design in a very efficient way. It’s really a return to the ethos of coachbuilding that informed car making over a century ago.”

Indeed, it’s a flashback to times when cars were few and far between and, as such, were both affordable only to the very wealthy and were built to their specification – much, in a way, as the custom car world of hot-rods and low-riders operates today. This, of course, was in part a product of Henry Ford’s series manufacturing techniques not yet being fully realised, but even then it was also a reflection of the prerogatives of the well-off. Selecting only the rolling chassis of a car from a automobile manufacturer, the body of the car would be constructed to order by a coachbuilder – those craftspeople who had historically made horse-drawn carriages. The likes of Duesenberg, Cadillac, Bugatti and Rolls-Royce all offered cars as “chassis only”, while some coachbuilders – the likes of Chapron, Franay, Pennock, Pininfarina and Zagato – would become almost as famous as the carmakers.

Senapati notes that safety and crash mitigation will, wisely, remain inflexible factors, which might in fact encourage the use of better performing composites. This, in turn, could allow for a greater degree of modularity – “so putting a car together becomes more like working with Lego bricks,” as he puts it. “Certainly we get customers calling with ‘a fantastic idea for a car’ every week. The question is just how far we will be able to respond to those requests in the future.”

Or, indeed, how far they will want to. Perhaps an equally big question will be what the advent of the bespoke car will mean for the manufacturers. Would, for example, allowing the amateur customer to design something that, in engineering and aesthetic terms alike, would make for a poor or ugly car be a clever move in terms of protecting brand identity? While, as Senapati puts it, “we don’t question the taste of requests made [for interiors]”, might “channelling those designs into something we would want to do” become a smart policy? For these answers, a crystal ball rather than a 3D printer is still more useful.

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latest project, the Rolls-Royce 103EX, is a vision of where the company’s car making will be in years to come.

2016/11/04 07:19

it will allow the possibility of a fully personalised car, such that nobody’s Rolls-Royce would look like any other

2016/11/04 07:19

3D printing, for instance, is, he notes, already being used to make parts for Formula One racing cars. Red Bull and Lotus are among the teams known to use 3D printing in the manufacture of parts for test cars,

2016/11/04 07:20

Umbrella storage in the Rolls-Royce 103EX – no detail is overlooked.

2016/11/04 07:20

Personalised hamper sets and other accessories are available to those with the money to buy a Bentley Bentayga.